Infinity's Illusion Audiobook By Richard Farr cover art

Infinity's Illusion

The Babel Trilogy, Book 3

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Infinity's Illusion

By: Richard Farr
Narrated by: Angela Dawe, Scott Merriman
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About this listen

In the conclusion to Richard Farr's richly imaginative Babel Trilogy, Morag and Daniel race toward a terrifying confrontation with an entity that holds the key to humanity's fate.

After narrowly surviving an encounter with the Architects, Daniel Calder experiences visions of global destruction, dreamlike moments of insight, and vivid "memories" of a meeting with a famous scientist - none of which ever happened. When he and his sister, Morag Chen, are attacked by unknown assailants deep in the cavernous city of the I'iwa cave dwellers, they must escape with an enigmatic, centuries-old mathematical calculation.

Time is running out. All signs point to the final "Anabasis", when the Babel myth will reach its terrible culmination. But thousands of miles of hazardous jungle and unforgiving ocean lie between the siblings and their one slim chance to fight back.

As they undertake their perilous journey, the apocalypse seems imminent: scores of vanished believers, global telecom failures, societies in chaos. The Architects have set the stage for their conquest, and Morag and Daniel - armed only with a list of mysterious numbers and the dreams of an aging astrophysicist - seem hopelessly outmatched.

©2018 Richard Farr (P)2017 Brilliance Publishing, Inc., all rights reserved. Excerpt from The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind by Julian Jaynes. © 1976, 1990 by Julian Jaynes. Used by permission of Houghton
Fantasy Fiction Science Fiction Young Adult
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Absolutely stupid ending

this book should've ended with the 2nd. It was basically a filler book with an ending that makes no sense at all. Do not waste your time. They do not find out who the Architects are and basically leaves you hanging with that so to put it plainly STRAIGHT UP STUPID and BORING

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The Epilogue Ruins It

The science is shaky, the philosophy is middle school level, but the story had charm, and the first ending is satisfactory.

Then the epilogue starts, and just ruins the whole thing.

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Eh

For a third book in a trilogy, I was hoping for a fantastic finish, but sadly was dragged on and on and then done, nothing. Books one and two were amazing, I was on edge excited to read what happens next, but that thrill ride was no longer there and turned into a merry go round with this book. I may seem a bit harsh, but it felt like the author rushed to create a finish and in his rush, forgot what made the first two so amazing.

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